Branner v. Piper
Branner v. Piper
Opinion of the Court
To this answer plaintiff demurred, — first, because it “ sets up a parol contemporaneous contract, different from the notes in suit; second, because it is not averred that the plaintiff received said pretended deeds, certificates and contracts, in payment of the said note.
The court sustained the demurrer, and rendered judgment against the defendant for the amount of both notes in suit. In this decision there is manifest error.
The defendant may show that he sold land to the plaintiff in payment of the note, and that he has, pursuant to agreement, assigned and delivered to the plaintiff the stipulated contracts. If this was done, the agreement thus to pay became executed, and the rights of the parties fixed accordingly, and under such circumstances it makes no difference that the agreement of the defendant to pay, and the plaintiff to accept payment in this way, was made contemporaneously with the execution of the note.
'With respect to the second ground of demurrer, it is only necessary to remark, that it is alleged said school fund contracts were “ assigned and delivered to the plaint
Whether an accord, with tender of satisfaction, not accepted, is equivalent to a satisfaction, is a point upon which the authorities are not agreed. 2 Greenl. Ev. § 31, and cases referred to; Mayfield v. Cotton, 21 Texas, 1; Blackburn v. Ormsby, 41 Pa. St. 97; Clarke v. Hawkins, 5 R. I. 219; Goodrich, v. Stanley, 24 Conn. 613; Billings v. Vanderbeck, 23 Barb. 546; Tilton v. Alcott, 16 Barb. 598. Under our system of pleadings, facts are to be stated, and the csCuse of action or defense which the facts establish need not be named.
If the plaintiff made with defendant a valid contract to receive payment in lands, and a future time was fixed for the execution of the writings, which were tendered and refused, these facts may be stated by the defendant, and may be relied upon by him, if not as being equivalent to actual payment or satisfaction, which we do not decide, yet certainly by way of cross demand, set-off, or counter claim, according to circumstances, in which latter case the defendant’s answer should set up the agreement, the defendant’s performance or offer to perform on his part, the plaintiff’s breach and the damages resulting in consequence. See Rev. § 2880, cl. 6; §§ 2884, 2886, 2889, 2891, and authorities above referred to.
The facts pleaded as a defense to the second note are
The judgment is reversed, and the cause remanded for further pleadings and proceedings, not inconsistent with this opinion.
Reversed.
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